Difference between revisions of "Hippies"

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(“I didn’t like that love-peace shit.” - Mo Tucker - Velvet Underground.... to name but one of many.)
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The hippie movement was a large musical and social subculture which was very popular from 1965 until about 1974. Hippies were visually recognizable by their long hair and anti-establishment attitude.<ref name=pc42/> They supported love and peace and wore flowers in their hair as a symbol of their peace loving nature.  
 
The hippie movement was a large musical and social subculture which was very popular from 1965 until about 1974. Hippies were visually recognizable by their long hair and anti-establishment attitude.<ref name=pc42/> They supported love and peace and wore flowers in their hair as a symbol of their peace loving nature.  
  
In the 1960s Zappa's Mothers Of Invention were the only rock band who were critical of the hippie movement.
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==References==
 
==References==

Revision as of 11:27, 21 September 2021

The hippie movement was a large musical and social subculture which was very popular from 1965 until about 1974. Hippies were visually recognizable by their long hair and anti-establishment attitude.[1] They supported love and peace and wore flowers in their hair as a symbol of their peace loving nature.


References


Frank Zappa about hippies

"I was never a hippie. Always a freak, but never a hippie." - Frank Zappa in Mother In Lore.

"I think that what they do is a definite indication of their inability to love, because the whole hippie scene is wishful thinking. They wish they could love but they're full of shit, and they're kidding themselves into saying, "I love! I love! I love!" And the more times they say it, the more times they think they love. But like it doesn't work, and most of them don't have the guts to admit to themselves that it's a lie." - Frank Zappa in Frank Kofsky interviews FZ.

See also

References